However, given that he's been of the NHL's top netminders over the past decade, new Panthers general manager Bill Zito is confident that Bobrovsky's struggles are just an anomaly, as the two-time Vezina Trophy winner owned a career .919 save percentage before this past year.
"Cut the guy a little slack," Zito, who got to know Bobrovsky during his time as an assistant general manager in Columbus from 2013-19,
said during an interview with Sportsnet earlier this month
. "It's a new environment, different structure, a different team, different system. If I'm going to bet on anybody to right the ship, to figure out what he needs to do to improve himself, it's that guy. Whatever it is he can do on his own, he's doing it. I'm nonplussed. [Bobrovsky] will be fine."
While Bobrovsky's season as a whole didn't fully live up to expectations, there were stretches in which the Novokuznetsk, Russia native looked almost infallible. Looking back, no other time was that more true than when he started three games in four nights heading into the All-Star break.
Returning to the crease after missing two games with an injury, Bobrovsky, clearly no worse for wear, stopped a combined 88 of 96 shots (.917 save percentage) to send the Panthers into a playoff spot with three straight road wins over Detroit, Minnesota and Chicago from Jan. 18-21.
"It was an important game with points in the bank," Bobrovsky, who went 8-3-0 over 11 starts before the break, said after dismissing the Blackhawks. "It will help us. We have a good break now to reset, refocus, re-energize and get ready for the most important part of the season."
Like the rest of the Panthers, Bobrovsky unfortunately took a step back coming out of the break, but was trending upward heading into the home stretch before another injury sidelined him once again. Over his final six starts of the regular season, he went 3-2-1 with a .921 save percentage.
Staying sharp throughout the roughly four-month lockdown that followed the arrival of COVID-19, Bobrovsky said he was feeling great heading into the NHL's "Return to Play" camp in July.
"I think after four months it is a fresh start," Bobrovsky said during Florida's two-week training camp. "It's been a long time for everybody. We actually had the time to rest and we had the time to train on our own. It's a long time, four months. It is a fresh start and we have to build all the chemistry and all the feelings and atmosphere inside of the locker room from the beginning."
During the Stanley Cup Qualifiers, Bobrovsky helped keep the Panthers in most games. But, alas, the Cats were sent home packing by the New York Islanders in four games. Finishing the series with a .901 save percentage, Bobrovsky surrendered just two goals in two of the games.
Now settled into his new surroundings, he appears poised to bounce back in 2020-21.
"It definitely [stinks] to lose and to end the season like that," Bobrovsky said after a 5-1 loss to New York in Game 4 of the best-of-five series. "But we have a great group of guys. Everybody's working hard and everybody gets good experience from it. We have to learn and move on."